06-06-2020, 10:35 PM
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#7
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Rookie
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Re: Unforgettable ~ The Story of JC Rhodes (NCAA/Madden)
CHAPTER TWO: CAROLINA SUNSHINE
August 8th, 2017 (Redwood, North Carolina)
JC sat in the passenger seat while gripping a newspaper. His brother reached over and forced him to buckle up. He usually did it out of habit but was angrily focused on the article he was reading. Tre’s old car turned on blasting thick hot air out of the vents forcing JC to quickly roll down his window to gather some oxygen. The only problem was that outside was equally hot and dense with the humidity of the rising sun and morning dew evaporation. The first day of the two-a-days.
“They saying we’re gonna be rebuilding? What?” JC said while pointing to an article in the local paper.
Tre laughed, “Bro, you can’t read into that stuff. Those writers got quotas.”
“Whatcha mean?”
The air of the car finally began to cool down to at least mid-seventy degrees. Still not enough for the windows to be rolled up. A breeze of tobacco farming at thirty miles per hour was completely necessary.
Tre answered, “They can’t predict every team good or bad. They gotta throw in some of the cliche labels. We lost a bunch of seniors so they’re gonna call us a rebuild. Redwood never been good until the last two years so they aren’t used to it. We’ll be fine.”
“That’s what I’m saying. And they barely said **** about you in here. You had more points than this kid from Lowell East.”
“Who? Ansley?” Tre asked, “I mean he’s solid. They only look at passing yards. They don’t even pay attention to my running.”
JC nodded, “Like Mike Vick.”
Tre shook, “Nah. I mean Mike Vick was good but he didn’t have that GOAT factor.”
JC wasn’t very familar with football history. He knew the big names. Michael Vick. Tom Brady. Cam Newton (since he was the star quarterback for the nearby Carolina Panthers). From everything he gathered, Vick was the legend.
“Legit QB’s win. Vick was talented… changed the game… but no rings. Brady, on the other hand, he has the rings. He got skill but it’s all up here,” as he pointed to his head, “that’s what makes GOATs and that’s what wins rings. So, yeah, my running is good but I need to be a better passer. Right now, Ansley is better.”
His little brother listened but disagreed, “Nah, man. It ain’t even close. We’re gonna beat their *** this year. How bad y’all beat them last year?”
Tre laughed, “We lost 48-7.”
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“Bring it in! Bring it in!”
The Redwood Raiders 2017 football squad jogged from their stretching positions to surround Coach Penny- still wearing the same old get up. Most of the players listened to the instructions to wear light gray shirts but some were forgetful enough to be wearing some red, some black, and even one blue. They would pay for that after practice.
JC was readying to take off his helmet but he realized everyone else kept it on. He did unbuckle his chinstrap though as it was truly irritating his chin. His helmet was also highly uncomfortable with the stiff pads protruding into his temple and forehead. He tried to move it around some to alleviate the unpleasantry.
“I don’t like the energy right now. I see feet dragging. I see heads flopping. Like I said: accountability. We’re nipping that **** in the bud right now. We’re going to try something different… idea of Coach Cunningham. We got some new faces around here. Instead of throwing y’all in drills for two weeks, we’re just gonna run it up. Offense versus defense. No contact but we’re tagging up. Full-speed. Let’s get it.”
JC looked through the crowd trying to find Tre. He did and his brother shared the same confusion. This must be something new. Half the team didn’t know where or what position to get into. The coaches sorted them out. Most of the starters on both sides got into huddles. JC naturally went to the offensive side.
After several confusing minutes, the team had been cleanly separated and plays were being called. And, just like Coach Penny said. They did begin running full-speed plays at one another. This probably broke several regulations but no one was up early enough at 8AM to come check or turn them in. The offense was surely better than the defense. Tre definitely stood out on the team. JC was proud to be his brother, and he felt inspired to play like him. He was thankful that he had been dragged onto this team.
After ten to fifteen minutes, Coach Cunningham, the offensive coordinator and wide receivers coach, pointed out JC from the crowd of young freshmen and motioned him over. JC realized that he hadn’t even thought about getting thrown in this early. He thought they might teach him some things first. Nope, Coach Cunningham put his arm around JC and lifted up a written paper with routes written on it, “That’s you. You got a five and out, got it?”
JC nervously nodded and jogged into the slot position replacing an older player. He didn’t get to see Tre’s reaction but lined up anyway. A coach yelled for him to back off the line of scrimmage. He tried to emulate what he saw as a wide receiver stance from memory but felt awkward.
The snap count went off- JC probably would have been flagged for a false start in a real game but the play went. It was like a battlefield to him. He heard helmets collide yards away inside the box. Every player had their own personal battle. All engaged. All giving it their all to prove their worth. JC followed his feet, going forward. He saw about five yards up to make his cut but before he even got there he was looking at the sky. In the snap of an instance, JC was on his back. North Carolina morning sunshine blinded him as his back was now damp.
Before he knew it, the play was dead. He wasn’t sure what had happened but he sat up to see his brother screaming at one of the defenders. His linemen held him back but everyone else was hooping and hollering over who JC assumed was the guy who had laid him out. Embarrassment ran through his body. Everyone surrounded and hyped up some small, pudgy kid while basically laughing at JC.
“We ain’t even got pads on! Cheap ****!” Tre yelled in anger.
His dispute fell on deaf ears while the team got hyped up. Whistles blew and Coach Penny called for everyone to come back to a knee. JC did not have to move, he just stood up and kneeled down with his pride hurt and head hanging. Tre watched from the other side of the gathering- still pissed off.
“Alright, alright. I can’t let y’all boys kill each others in the first ten minutes. I love that intensity. I can feel the energy you boys are capable of. Knotts,” Coach Penny pointed at the boy who had blindsided JC- a short, pudgy red-haired boy with pasty skin and built densely, “I love linebackers that hit. I do. However, you went to the head. You do that in a game, guess what? Fifteen yards, first down, and your *** goes and twiddles your thumbs in the lockerroom. Also, no more of that without pads on. These are your brothers out here. Can’t be hurting each other. Knotts, you need Rhodes just as much as he’ll need you on that field. Don’t forget that. Alright, let’s break up into indy!”
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A faded orange tint took over the room. It was a large, hollow space with a long oak dinner table occupying its middle. Despite its grand size, only three people sat at it. JC, Tre, and their grandfather. Their dinner continued as it always had. Pop would say an extended prayer and no one would speak until their plate was finished. That actually never took long when you considered that there were two growing boys and Pop was an excellent country-style cook. Tre was the first to finish his assortment of steak, potatoes, green beans, and corn.
“Had a good first day today. Real good.”
Pop, a 79-year old farmer born and raised, raised his gray eyebrows while continuing to slowly eat, “Y’all boys gonna be good again?”
“Oh yeah. I mean, we gotta everybody back on offense. But, we’re still missing some dudes on defense. Won’t have the hitters we did last year.”
Pop nodded in his cliche overalls and darkened black skin that had definitely been weathered, “Jeremiah, how you like it?”
JC swallowed some steak and shook his head, “Well, I got jacked up. First play out there and some dude just cheap shotted me. Bull****.”
For a 79-year old, Pop was no slouch. He might move slow here and there but his strong hands and stern demeanor never aged. As soon as the curse word left his lips, Pop’s hand dropped his fork and smacked him upside the head quicker than JC saw coming. The young brother quickly and adamantly apologized for the emotional language.
Pop cleared his throat, “Well, you gotta go back out there and get ‘em back. No cheap shot though. You do it straight up like a man. Y’all still do them hitting drills where it’s just two players?”
Tre nodded.
“First day of pads. Coach always gets them boys out there to hit each other. Call him out.”
JC nodded.
“I’m glad you’re out there playing. It’s good for you. I know you’re into basketball but football will toughen you up.”
JC and Tre agreed. Once Tre had heard what Coach Penny had said to JC that day of conditioning, he was relentless with his strategy to get JC to play football. Constantly bringing up more examples of great NBA players who played football. Film clips of basketball players doing football-inspired movements or just how durable some of their play was.
Tre also had something to get off his chest, “I got some news today, too. Coach Penny pulled me in after practice. Said he got a call from Lenior-Rhyne and Winston-Salem State over the weekend. They’re both offering me full-rides.”
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